Sorry for the delay in the release of the trailer. I was dealing with getting rights to music for it which are now secured. So now I'm doing the final mix on the audio and it should be up online next week!

Progress on the film itself is going well. It will be done late summer/fall for the festival season submissions.

I have a trailer finished and screened it last night with Nick and Lindsay. It's looking great and I'm excited to release it online pretty soon. Just have to finish up a few technical things and it will be up soon. Be on the lookout!

So I know I'm a pretty bad blogger... I can't exactly live up to Lindsay's benchmark but things are indeed coming along really well. I'm in the middle of cutting a couple different versions of a trailer for the film so look out for those to be posted on the site in the next couple weeks. Cutting together the trailer has only made me even more excited about how this film is coming together. The only downside I'm going to have cutting the feature is making sure it doesn't turn into a 4 hour epic. With all of the great footage that Lindsay provided along with what I've shot, its going to be a

I know there has been a lot of radio silence in regard to any progress on the documentary. I went out of town for 5 months working on a new sequel of Planet of the Apes. Now I'm back home and getting back in gear. I am finishing up the last few interviews so I can start cutting the film. You should see a trailer in the next couple months.

I just finished filming all day today with Nick, Lindsay and a bunch of their friends. Went with Nick to get a new set of legs and then some friends came over to Nick and Lindsay's house to help get all the food and drinks prepped. It is really evident how excited Nick is about getting back in the air tomorrow and the excitement was also clear among Nick's friends. I can't wait to capture every second of it on film, we have close to dozen cameras to capture every angle and tomorrow should be an amazing climax to what has been a great couple months of filming.

Visiting my friends and family for thanksgiving was a lot of fun and of course everyone asked me "What are you working on right?" I also get this question a lot when visiting with friends in LA. When I explained the documentary to them, I got some really great reactions. People were asking me if they could see a trailer (that's a little ways off still), when they could see the movie, and everyone had a lot of questions and general interest in the project. The level of interest in the project I've gotten after only taking 2 minutes to explain it makes me really excited about where this is going.

I also have continued shooting quite a bit of footage including Nick's appointment with his surgeon, a second interview with him, and Lindsay's first interview. Every time I finish a day of shooting, I get more excited about the finished product. With each piece shot, I can see it coming together in the editing room inside my head. Shouldn't be too long, Nick's first jump back is less than

I shot Nick's first interview last week and it went amazingly well. In all of the interviews that I've done in past documentaries, Nick was one of the easiest people to shoot. Despite having never seen any of the questions I had for him, he had some really well thought out, articulate answers. For me it was interesting hearing him tell the story in his own words about his road to recovery and learning to walk again. I would love to tell everyone more about it, but I don't want to give too much away. ;) But I will say that it did further reinforce to me how incredible and rare Nick and Lindsay's story is, and I hope the film will allow it to reach even more people.

As a side-note, we shot the interview at Project Walk, the spinal cord recovery center that Nick has been working with. It's such a cool place to visit and I would suggest everyone give their website a look.

Nick and Lindsay came up to Hollywood to get Nick some tunnel time with Travis Fienhage, a world champion skydiving coach. It was an awesome night. I was pretty amazed at how well Nick was flying, considering he's had to adjust to new legs and using his muscles in completely new ways. I put my Epic on my helmet and stuck my head just inside the door to film. The lights at ifly Hollywood also made for some great shots as they have LED's shining down on the tunnel that are constantly rotating colors. Every day I get more and more excited about the potential of this film. Nick and Lindsay's story is one of the most inspiring that I've seen and I'm really excited to tell it in cinematic fashion. If anyone hasn't ever been in a wind tunnel, I highly recommend checking it out. Just one word of warning... its more addictive than most drugs.

I kicked off the first day of filming at an event at a place called Project Walk. Nick has been doing rehab and learning to walk again at Project Walk and they had a red carpet event for everyone who has overcome their spinal injuries to walk down a red carpet with no more than the assistance of one person, or a walker, crutches etc.. It was a truly inspiring day seeing so many people who were told that they would never walk again... get up out of their wheelchairs and do just that. And everyone there had a smile on their face and was more excited about their future than most people you would meet anywhere. I also learned a lot about Nick's rehab process and his injuries. It was interesting learning about how his prosthetic legs actually work and what challenges they present. I got some great footage of Nick walking down the Red Carpet, and I think he did so faster than everyone else there.